Mail & Guardian

How far Castro’s revolution had come

- Darryl Accone Photo: Yamil Lage/AFP

He outlived his great comrade and compañero Che Guevara by a little over 49 years, but now Fidel Castro is dead.

Patria o muerte! death. Venceremos! We will win. Those two rallying calls were Castro’s characteri­stic sign-off to speeches. Among the most memorable times he uttered them was at the massive gathering in Matanzas, Cuba, on July 26 1991, to mark the 38th anniversar­y of the beginning of the Cuban revolution. What made the occasion doubly significan­t was that preceding Castro on the podium was Nelson Mandela.

A day earlier, the Cuban Council of State had conferred the country’s highest honour, the José Marti medal, on Mandela. The award itself was made by Castro at the rally.

Shortly after, the radical and robustly independen­t Pathfinder Press in the United States published both leaders’ speeches in a slim volume titled How Far We Slaves Have Come, derived from Castro’s ringing refrain in his speech. One instance goes thus: “We who come from way back, who were conquered, who were exploited, and who were enslaved throughout history, what marvellous ideas we can defend today; what just Homeland or ideas we can uphold! And we can think in Latin American and even world terms. How far we slaves have come!”

In May this year, South African imprint Kwela Books republishe­d the Pathfinder book, so it’s readily available in this country. On my wishlist would be another reprint from Pathfinder, this time of Socialism and Man in Cuba by Che Guevara and Castro (1989).

I have my copy still: 20 pages of Guevara’s eponymous title essay followed by 31 pages of Che’s ideas are absolutely relevant today, Castro’s address on October 8 1987 — 20 years after Che’s murder.

Guevara “fell in battle” and was gunned down, a wounded and unarmed prisoner, the next day. Cuban tradition has always been to mark his death as the day he was captured on the battlefiel­d.

Castro ended his encomium with: “We might add that there are men who carry inside them the dignity of the world, and one of those men is Che! “Patria o muerte! “Venceremos!” Guevara and Castro are almost inseparabl­e, as were their Communist predecesso­rs Engels and Marx and Trotsky and Lenin. Three great partnershi­ps of the mind taking on the small matter of capitalism.

Fidel & Che: A Revolution­ary Friendship (Sceptre, 2009) concludes with its author Simon Reid-Henry writing: “... that both men’s stars seemed to dim when they parted suggests one thing: they may be two of the most iconic individual­s of the twentieth century, but it is this common bond that underpins their individual acclaim. It seems right that it is so, for they achieved more together than they ever did apart.”

Fidel had much to say about Che in the comprehens­ive, possibly definitive My Life (Allen Lane, 2007), for which Castro spent 100 hours between January 2003 and December 2005 being interviewe­d by Ignacio Ramonet, editor of Le Monde Diplomatiq­ue and one of the prime movers behind the first World Social Forum in Porto Alegre.

Ramonet edited their conversa- Divided loyalties: A customer in an American flag T-shirt (left) at a Cuban newsstand dominated by images of Fidel Castro and Che Geuvara. Inspiratio­nal speeches by Castro and Nelson Mandela were published in tions, which were published first in a Spanish-language edition in 2006, followed by Andrew Hurley’s English version.

In the penultimat­e chapter, Summing up a Life and a Revolution, Castro says of Guevara: “Che — I always remember him as one of the most extraordin­ary personalit­ies I’ve ever known. One of the noblest, most extraordin­ary, most disinteres­ted men I’ve ever known.”

Asked how history would judge him, Castro replies: “That’s something it’s not worthwhile worrying about ... I’m sure that if I asked teenagers of practicall­y any country who Napoleon was, they’d know the name Napoleon more because of the cognac of that name than for all the things he did on the battlefiel­d. So I say, why worry?”

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